When a man
writes about gender roles, the first thing you should note is that it was written by a man.
Not exact matches
It's been a while since I've
written here
about Christianity,
gender roles, and the whole egalitarian / complementarian divide, but a couple things prompted today's post.
P.S. Rachel Held Evans also
wrote about this Friday in a post called The Absurd Legalism of
Gender Roles: Exhibit C — «As long as I can't see her...»: http://rachelheldevans.com/blog/legalism-
gender-
roles-exhibit-c-piper-commentary
In my experience, it goes like this: Someone
writes something at the Gospel Coalition or Desiring God
about the importance of preserving hierarchal
gender roles in the Church.
This is a film
about female
gender roles made by a male director, who doesn't seem to know much
about female
gender roles, despite the script being
written by a woman.
In a perfect world, we would no longer need to
write about the
roles of
gender and ethnicity in the workplace.
Some may wonder
about the value of premarital education, Hawkins
wrote in one of his research papers, but with changing
gender roles, economic independence for women and no - fault divorce laws, «there is an increasing need for greater knowledge and relationship skills for contemporary marriages to succeed.»